in this house we love trans and nonbinary butches and studs! (23 y/o)
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
There are so many benefits being with a big bear stud/butch. Reasons like:
1. You will be warm at night.
2. You can wear our clothes.
3. Have you had our hugs? 😌👌🏾
4. The best snuggles you'll ever have.
5. We can lift things for you.
And 6. Why would you not one us? 🤷🏿
140 notes
·
View notes
Text
growing old with a femme. watching her hair slowly fade into a mix of the most beautiful grays and silvers. going out dancing with her even though our muscles ache for days afterwards. bringing her to our old favorite bars and restaurants just so i can see the light in her eyes shine brighter. getting choked up realizing how far we've made it. loving her more and more with each passing day.
876 notes
·
View notes
Text

Does posting WIPs with fat hairy lesbians in it count as pride month posts?
161 notes
·
View notes
Text
This is your reminder that:
You are femme enough.
You are butch enough.
You are lesbian enough.
Butch and femme are an identity. Lesbian is an identity. It’s who you are!
Not your weight, not how you dress, not your sex drive.
ITS YOU!!!!
I’ll remind you everyday if I have to (and send it off with a little kiss on the cheek too)
486 notes
·
View notes
Text
i need everyone to watch king of drag on revry. you owe it to yourself to watch drag sylvester stallone fold a fitted sheet and drag ira glass do push ups.
5 notes
·
View notes
Text

Susie Kissing Sally by Virginia artist Susan Singer
http://susansingerart.blogspot.com/
6K notes
·
View notes
Text

what if we cut each other’s hair in the kitchen…….. and we were both butches
11x16in acrylic on canvas
5K notes
·
View notes
Text
i think we’re losing the plot if we equate stone identity with sexual trauma. it CAN be rooted in trauma. it often is. but if we surround stone identity with you-must-have-this-much-trauma-to-ride gatekeepy nonsense then this means every time i declare myself to be a stone lesbian i am also necessarily disclosing that i have sexual trauma. from a purely personal standpoint i don’t want that. i don’t need anyone to understand why i’m stone, unless i decide to have that conversation and get into it with them. they should respect it regardless. to me stone is a helpful word that allows us to communicate, feel secure in our needs during sex, and to find others like us. it can be more than that, but it doesn’t need to be more than that. i get that there’s a fear of diluting stone and making the word less powerful but quite frankly idgaf, i think it’s more important that more people know they can be stone if they want and they don’t need to prove how traumatized they are, even to themselves
460 notes
·
View notes
Text
I haven't seen this version anywhere so I made one!
141K notes
·
View notes